Summary
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Chapter 3
Policy Formation:
Problems, Agendas, and Formulation
1
Today’s Topics
Nature of policy problems
Agendas
Agenda-setting process
Nondecision-making
Formulation of proposed policies
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2
Introduction
Federal Reports Act
Allowed information gathering necessitated by new federal programs
Collection grew with government
Paperwork Reduction Act
Agency requests for information had to be cleared by the Office of Management and Budget
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3
Introduction
Formation
The total process of creating, adopting, and implementing a policy (the policy process)
Formulation
The crafting of alternatives or options for dealing with a problem
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4
4
Policy Problems
Conditions or situations that produce needs or dissatisfaction among people and for which relief or redress by governmental action is sought
Unreasonable when judged against a standard
Acceptable for government action and there is a possible solution
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5
What characteristics or qualities make a problem public?
Problem Creation
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Standard or Value
Government Action Possible
Problem
Condition
6
Fig. 3.1
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Policy Problems
Defined by social constructs as well as objective dimensions
Perceived differently by groups and individuals
Perceptions change over time with values and conditions
A political process as definitions point to solutions
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7
Why do some see uninsured Americans as a private problem, and others as a public problem? Conflicting perceptions or definitions of a problem, and disagreement over remedies, reduce the likelihood of positive action.
Policy Problems
Causation
What causes a problem?
Scope
How big a problem?
Tractability
How difficult to fix?
Severity
How serious a problem?
How serious are the consequences?
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The Policy Agenda
Problems compete for policy-makers’ attention due to limited time and resources
Policy agenda (problem requires government attention)
Political priorities
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9
The Agenda-Setting Process
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Systematic Agenda
Policy Entrepreneurs
Mandatory Items
Problem
Issue
Institutional Agenda
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Fig. 3.2
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The Policy Agenda
Two Types of Agendas
Systemic (discussion)
All those matters people are talking and fretting about
Institutional (action)
Problems which government officials feel obliged to give active and serious attention
Can be mandatory or discretionary
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11
What is an example of a systemic agenda item?
What is an example an institutional agenda item?
11
The Agenda-Setting Process
Multiple Streams Approach
Mostly independent streams occasionally come together
Problems
Policies (solutions)
Politics
Opens a “policy window” that allows the issue to come onto the agenda
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12
Kingdon’s Agenda-Setting Model
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Policy Window
Problems Stream
Policy-Proposals Stream
Politics Stream
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Figure 3.3
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The Agenda-Setting Process
Alternative view of agenda setting
Agenda building is a competitive process--lots of factors affect agenda status
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The Agenda-Setting Process
Factors in agenda-setting:
Disturbances: interest groups try to maintain equilibrium, and react accordingly if this is threatened
Political leadership
Presidential efforts
Policy entrepreneurs
Supreme Court decisions
Crisis/major event
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In his study of presidential agenda setting, Professor Paul Light found that in selecting major domestic issues on which to advocate action, presidents are motivated by three primary considerations: electoral benefits, historical achievement, and good policy.
The Agenda-Setting Process
Factors in agenda-setting (cont):
Protest activity
Media attention
Changes in statistical indicators
Political changes
Other events/methods
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16
What issues did the September 11, 2001 attacks bring to the top of the national agenda?
16
The Agenda-Setting Process
Agenda denial
Some groups work to keep status quo
Strategies:
There’s no problem
It’s not appropriate for government
It’ll be worse if government acts
It’s better solved by private means
Create a commission
Electoral activity
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17
Nondecisions
When a problem or policy alternative is kept off the agenda by force, culture, or political skill
But, can help analyze the policy process
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Loss of Agenda Status
Items that reach the agenda can also change or disappear
“Issue-attention cycle”
Some items do not go through this cycle (ex. environmental protection)
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Five stage of the issue-attention cycle: pre-problem stage; alarmed discovery and euphoric enthusiasm; realization of cost; gradual decline in the intensity of public interest; post-problem stage.
The Formulation of Policy Proposals
Development of pertinent and acceptable proposed courses of action for dealing with public problems
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The Formulation of Policy Proposals
Key Questions
Is the policy technically sound?
Are the budgetary costs reasonable?
Is the proposal politically acceptable?
If the proposal becomes law, will the public accept it?
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21
The Formulation of Policy Proposals
Who is involved?
President and advisors (leading source of policy initiatives)
Governmental agencies
Presidential organizations (task forces, commissions)
Legislators
Interest groups
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22
Policy Formulation as a Technical Process
Two different activities involved in formulation
Decisions on what, if anything, should be done about a given problem
Adoption of legislation or administrative rules that appropriately enact the agreed upon principles
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What is meant by the term “legislative history”? How does it apply to policy formulation?